Griffiths v. Brooks

289 N.W. 715, 227 Iowa 966
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 16, 1940
DocketNo. 44885.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 289 N.W. 715 (Griffiths v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffiths v. Brooks, 289 N.W. 715, 227 Iowa 966 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Richards, J.

The controversy to be decided is one between plaintiff and defendant Brooks. But certain transactions between plaintiff and defendant Stevens have such relationship thereto that it may be well to make mention of them at the outset.

In January 1938 Stevens agreed to sell to plaintiff a new Pontiac automobile for $1,009.80 (inclusive of sales tax), of which amount plaintiff agreed to pay $709.80 on May 1, 1938, the date on which Stevens agreed to deliver the car. The remaining $300 of the purchase price plaintiff paid to Stevens when the contract was made or within a day or two thereafter, by turning over to Stevens two old automobiles. In February 1938 Stevens prevailed on plaintiff to pay him $350, Stevens holding out the inducement that in consideration of being paid, the $350 he would credit $375 on the $709.80 due May 1, 1938. But when May 1st arrived Stevens neither delivered the Pon *968 tiac nor returned any of tbe money or property, nor did be thereafter do either of these . things. Prior to these dealings between Stevens and plaintiff, the latter, in a conversation with Brooks, had said that he was intending to buy a new car and desired to trade in the two old automobiles, and Brooks had stated to plaintiff he would send him a man who would make bim a good deal. Brooks told Stevens of this conversation and there ensued the transactions between Stevens and plaintiff already described. Plaintiff was a dairyman, and upon his property Brooks had long been writing all the insurance. The two had been well acquainted for many years. In addition to his insurance business Brooks was president of a company engaged in financing loans on automobiles. Soon after contracting with Stevens plaintiff asked.Brooks’ opinion as to whether it would be safe to deliver the old automobiles to Stevens, and Brooks answered he thought it would be. But plaintiff made the $350 payment without any advising with Brooks, and when plaintiff told Brooks the payment had been made the latter stated it was his opinion that plaintiff had not exercised good judgment. When on about May 1st it became apparent 'that though Stevens had procured the old cars and the $350, nothing was being realized in return, plaintiff consulted his attorney and then again contacted Brooks. There is sharp. controversy as to what conversations then took place. Plaintiff testified that Brooks said, “I am a little short of money, but I will see that you get your ear, you will not lose a dime”. Plaintiff’s hired man related that Brooks made a statement of similar import sometime in the spring of 1938. Brooks as a witness denied saying any of these things. He testified that when plaintiff came to see him on about May 1st he (Brooks) phoned Stevens and tried to induce him to carry out his contract with plaintiff, and that upon being told by Stevens that the látter did not have the necessary funds he, Brooks, advised plaintiff that the only way he could get his automobile would be to have a contract secured by the automobile or by having Stevens sign a contract and pay for it by the month.

However, what the parties actually did is not in dispute. That is, on Sunday, Maj 15, 1938, plaintiff and Brooks went to the place of business, of a Pontiac dealer in Renwick, Iowa. There Brooks procured from the dealer a Pontiac at the wholesale price of $880.77, and the ear was turned over to plaintiff, *969 wbo drove it back to Ms borne in. Des Moines. The retail price of this ear was $1,090.85 instead' of the $1,009.80 that was the retail price (inclusive of sales tax.) of the car Stevens had agreed to sell, the difference being that the car plaintiff acquired was a “deluxe” model, the other was “standard”. On the following day, May 16, 1938, Brooks and plaintiff met at the latter’s home -and there occurred the transaction on which plaintiff ’s cause of action is predicated. The purpose of the conference was to make settlement for the transaction of the day before, that is-, the acquiring of the car by plaintiff at Renwick. And it may at this point be said that a -fundamental dispute between the parties is whether Brooks in what he did was merely complying with a request from plaintiff for aid because of his predicament, or whether, as plaintiff claims, Brooks was assuming personal liability for the Stevens contract and was bearing the loss plaintiff had suffered by reason of Stevens having procured and kept plaintiff’s property and money. During this conference of May 16, 1938, plaintiff signed a check payable to Brooks for $415.85, and a conditional sales contract reciting that a balance of $506.76 of the.purchase, price constituted a lien upon the oar. He also signed a note for the $506.76. It appears that Stevens afterwards added his signature to. the note but no defense predicated thereon is before us. Brooks assigned tha contract and note to a bank and used the proceeds toward paying the Renwick dealer for the car. Thereafter plaintiff brought this action against Brooks for damages in the amount of the note and conditional- sales contract, alleging - that the signing of the note and contract by plaintiff was fraudulently procured by.Brooks, in that plaintiff did not have his glasses with him and consequently was unable to read what he signed, and in that at no time during the transaction did Brooks represent to plaintiff that he would be required to give a conditional sales contract or note, and in that plaintiff would not-have siaucJ tin- instrument? .except for the falsorajjd .fraudulent represej^H irons made by Brooks t’ite't pat^r he was signing was mal order blank for the car, and in ¿hat, plaintiff owed Brooks nor Stevens any -sum of money for the Reason paid the full purchase price in cash and in property. close of all the testimony Brooks moved that a verdict be direct^l in his favor against plaintiff. The motion was sustained and a judgment entered. Plaintiff appealed.

*970 Error is predicated upon the ruling on the motion. Its first ground was that fraud on part of Brooks was not shown, in that no art or artifice was practiced by him, and plaintiff was not prevented from reading the instruments, the evidence showing affirmatively that plaintiff could read and write the English language and had the opportunity to read the instruments before he signed them and failed to do so, and his failure was due to his own negligence.

One of plaintiff’s allegations, to the effect that Brooks represented that the paper being signed was a formal order blank for the car, may be eliminated from consideration because it has no support in the evidence. With respect to the allegation that Brooks at' no time represented to plaintiff' that he would be required to give a conditional sales contract or note, the testimony of plaintiff and of Brooks is at variance. But it is unquestioned that during the conference, at which plaintiff signed the contract and the note, Brooks made out and submitted to plaintiff a “work sheet”. Upon this paper, introduced as Exhibit 1, are several computations consisting of columns or groups of figures. And though figures.only, without words, appear in Exhibit 1, one may easily find on the work sheet a computation by which the exact amount of the check that plaintiff signed was derived, as well as a computation that resulted in the determination of another exact amount, and this was the amount for which the note and conditional sales contract were given.

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Bluebook (online)
289 N.W. 715, 227 Iowa 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffiths-v-brooks-iowa-1940.